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In this thought-provoking speech, Nobel laureate Sir John Cornforth discusses the responsibility of scientists in protecting the future and highlights the lack of consideration from politicians, administrators, and businessmen. He emphasizes the importance of scientific evidence and the need for scientists to take action.
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Sir John Cornforth - Nobel Prize for Chemistry “Scientists as Citizens” 1975 www.vega.org.uk
A few hundred years ago - a mere breath of time - a concentrated source of energy was discovered in the fossil fuels…
… essentially the energy of old sunlight, trapped by life and buried by the earth.
Humanity has exploited this resource with all the restraint of a fox in a chicken house.
The perspective of the politician does not extend beyond the next election
The perspective of the politician does not extend beyond the next election The unborn have no vote,
The perspective of the politician does not extend beyond the next election The unborn have no vote, The average citizen‘s reaction is:“What did posterity ever do for me?“
The perspective of the politician does not extend beyond the next election The unborn have no vote, The average citizen‘s reaction is:“What did posterity ever do for me?“ The administrator seldom has a scientific background, or any remit to consider an extended future.
The perspective of the politician does not extend beyond the next election The unborn have no vote, The average citizen‘s reaction is:“What did posterity ever do for me?“ The administrator seldom has a scientific background, or any remit to consider an extended future. The businessman wants to make profits—the quicker the better for himself or his shareholders.
Among all these people there seems to be a general vague expectation, if they think of the matter at all, that the scientists are sure to find some way to rescue future generations from the…
… shit into which the present one is dropping them. NB - It took 1,000,000 years to create the fossil fuel we use each year
So, if you are a scientist you realize before long that if the future is in anyone’s hands… it’s in yours 1975
Kappa after a tennis match at Sussex Andy Sierkowski
The perspective of the politician does not extend beyond the next election
The perspective of the politician does not extend beyond the next election The unborn have no vote,
The perspective of the politician does not extend beyond the next election The unborn have no vote, The average citizen‘s reaction is:“What did posterity ever do for me?“ \
The perspective of the politician does not extend beyond the next election The unborn have no vote, The average citizen‘s reaction is:“What did posterity ever do for me?“ The administrator seldom has a scientific background, or any remit to consider an extended future.
…among non-scientists there seems to be a general vague expectation, if they think of the matter at all, that the scientists are sure to find some way to rescue future generations from the…
The perspective of the politician does not extend beyond the next election The unborn have no vote, The average citizen‘s reaction is:“What did posterity ever do for me?“ The administrator seldom has a scientific background, or any remit to consider an extended future. The businessman wants to make profits—the quicker the better for himself or his shareholders.
How many understand or appreciate the technical world we live in?
Politicians Investment bankers Administrators Writers Footballers Celebrities Ordinary Citizens
So, if you are a scientist you realize before long that if the future is in anyone’s hands it’s in yours
I took a million year’s to create the fossil fuel we use each year
SCIENCE It may seem odd that a system of knowledge based on doubt could have been the driving force in constructing modern civilisation
Scientists do not believe; they check: I am not asking you to believe anything I say on a scientific matter; only that there is tested evidence for all of it, and I know the nature of that evidence and can make a judgement of its worth
The perspective of the politician does not usually extend beyond the next election. The unborn have no vote, whereas the easiest way to get the votes of the majority is to promise them increases in their power to consume.
The average citizen‘s reaction is:“What did posterity ever do for me?“ The administrator seldom has a scientific background, or any remit to consider an extended future. The businessman wants to make profits—the quicker the better for himself or his shareholders.
University of Sussex Nobel Prize for Chemistry
“Scientists as Citizens” by Sir John Cornforth “Kappa” cf www.vega.org.uk
Scientists do not believe; they check: I am not asking you to believe anything I say on a scientific matter; only that there is tested evidence for all of it, and I know the nature of that evidence and can make a judgement of its worth
So, if you are a scientist you realize before long that if the future is in anyone’s hands it’s in yours
The Scientists’ true strength is something which I can put no better than Shaw in his all but forgotten play, “Back to Methusaleh” “But my way’s did not work; and theirs’ did; and they were able to tell me why. That is their strength over me; they seek no other power” from John Cornforth (cf www.vega.org.uk)
…And sometimes they would add that the mess is of the scientists‘ creation, not theirs. So, if you are a scientist and you have this perspective, you realize before long that if the future is in anyone‘s hands it is in yours; and you can recognize some of your actions, although they might be innocent or even praiseworthy from a civic point of view, as hostile to the future of your species, or at least to a large number of its future members.
The chemists who create new compositions of matter have transformed…the modern world. (making) things like dyestuffs and medicines… (and) New metals, plastics, composites, textiles, adhesives, coatings, rubbers, insulators, conductors, semiconductors, super-conductors, optical fibres, detergents, ceramics .... the list is much longer than this, and chemists created the material for them all.
I do not say that scientists are always free from guilt: I shall be talking of their weaknesses later on. But when scientists are condemned by people who are too lazy to learn anything about science but who have no intention of giving up the comfort, health and enhanced quality of life that science has brought them, I recall Caliban‘s curse from The Tempest.
Caliban‘s curse from The Tempest. Thou taught‘st me language, and my profit on‘t Is, I know how to curse: the red plague rid you For learning me your language!
A physicist, a mathematician, a biologist or an earth scientist could tell similar stories. Scientists are embedded in the fabric of modern society and most of them spend their whole careers responding to the demands of the state or the market. They are so useful that the overwhelming majority who are non-scientists assume that that is what they are there for.
To an increasing extent this majority is insisting that scientists ought to concentrate more on what society says It wants from them; and as for the teachers of science in schools and universities, their business is to train people who will continue to satisfy these wants. Scientists generally do an admirable job in responding to these requests.
…And sometimes they would add that the mess is of the scientists‘ creation, not theirs. So, if you are a scientist and you have this perspective, you realize before long that if the future is in anyone‘s hands it is in yours; and you can recognize some of your actions, although they might be innocent or even praiseworthy from a civic point of view, as hostile to the future of your species, or at least to a large number of its future members.
So, if you are a scientist and you have this perspective, you realize before long that if the future is in anyone’s hands it is in yours;
The chemists who create new compositions of matter have transformed, to an even greater extent, the modern world. They began to do this not much more than a century ago, starting with things like dyestuffs and medicines that are valuable but not needed in very large quantity. Sometimes, the things that they learned to produce were already known in nature;
now, most products have no natural equivalent, they were created to satisfy the wants of an ever more complex society. New metals, plastics, composites, textiles, adhesives, coatings, rubbers, insulators, conductors, semiconductors, super-conductors, optical fibres, detergents, ceramics .... the list is much longer than this, and chemists created the material for them all.
Scientists as Citizens Sir John Cornforth, AG, CBE, FRS Aust. J. Chem., 1993, 46, 265—275 RACI 75th Anniversary Lecture 1992 see also www.vega.org.uk
The Art of the probable Science is the art of the probable and I am using that word not just in its modern sense of “likely” but in its older and more exact meaning:”testable”